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Bluegrass Vacation
Barnes and Noble
Bluegrass Vacation
Current price: $17.99
Barnes and Noble
Bluegrass Vacation
Current price: $17.99
Size: CD
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' first break in his career as a musician came when he joined the veteran bluegrass group
in 1983, and even though it turned out to be just one of many creative paths he would follow, a look at his catalog confirms he's never lost his love for acoustic country music and the home truths of bluegrass storytelling. 2013's
and 2016's
were mostly acoustic efforts that were among the best-reviewed work of his career (the latter also earned him a Grammy nomination), and 2023's
is at once a companion piece to those records and his first proper bluegrass album since leaving
.
was recorded in Nashville with a crew of first-class bluegrass pickers, including
on Dobro,
on fiddle,
and
on mandolin, and
on banjo.
' guitar playing is more than strong enough for him to stand alongside the high-priced help, if more stylishly idiosyncratic (he favors occasional bursts of atonality more than his accompanists), and the best songs here are further evidence he's a remarkably gifted tunesmith. "Angels Carry Me" is a powerful tale of one man's love-hate relationship with his father, and "Momma's Eyes" is an equally moving and no less complicated story of a woman's grim final years. "One More Glass of Whiskey" and "Sweet Li'l Cora-Mae" are more cheerful variations on classic themes, and "Longhair Bluegrass" is a funny and loving first-person account of his discovery of the birth of newgrass (as well as meeting fellow acoustic pickers who smoked reefer). This being a
album, he can't quite hold back the snarky undercurrent that mostly stayed quiet on
, and there's a smirk in "Let the Old Dog In" and "Backwater Blues" that feels a bit too smart for the room. But the closing track, "Old Time Music Is Here to Stay," is a stunner, a reminder that the enduring themes of bluegrass and classic country never lose their relevance, sometimes in ways that hurt as much as they heal.
could be said to be
' meditation on the notion that you can go home again, though it's also a place he never entirely left behind; it certainly testifies to his love of bluegrass and how it continues to inform and jibe with his songwriting decades into his musical career. ~ Mark Deming